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Naked News

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Naked News
GenreNews
Entertainment
Adult website
Created byFernando Pereira
Kirby Stasyna
Presented by
  • Eila Adams
  • Madison Banes
  • Alana Blaire
  • Laura Desiree
  • Tia Larose
  • Marina Valmont
  • Frankie Kennedy
  • Isabella Rossini
[1]
Country of originCanada
Original languageEnglish
Production
ProducerLucas Tyler
Production locationToronto
Running time20 minutes
Original release
ReleaseDecember 1999 (1999-12) –
present

Naked News is a Canadian news and entertainment program owned by Naked Broadcasting Network. It features nude female news presenters reading news bulletins derived from news wires.[2] The show's production studio is located in Toronto. There are six daily news programs a week and they are approximately 20 minutes long.[3] The female cast members either read the news fully nude, or disrobe as they present their various segments,[4] including entertainment, sports, movies, food, sex and relationships. Naked News TV! is an offshoot of the web program and is broadcast on pay TV in various countries around the world.[5][6] The show recruits women from around the world to appear on a regular basis or as guest reporters, and their auditions are included in the program.[citation needed] Another segment of the show is Naked in the Streets in which a reporter appears topless in the street and asks the public about various topics.[7]

History

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Then-Naked News anchor Christine Kerr, in Toronto (Canada), 2008

Naked News was conceived by Fernando Pereira and Kirby Stasyna and debuted in December 1999[5] as a web-based news service featuring an all-female cast.[8]

It began with only one anchor, Victoria Sinclair, who worked for the program until 2015.[9][10] As the show grew, the number of female anchors increased. Roxanne West joined Sinclair as a lead anchor, and other cast members included Holly Weston, April Torres, Lily Kwan, Sandrine Renard, Erin Sherwood, Athena King, Brooke Roberts, Michelle Pantoliano, Erica Stevens,[5] Samantha Page, Christine Kerr and Valentina Taylor, plus guest anchors.

The website was popularized entirely by word of mouth,[3] and quickly became a popular web destination. During the height of its popularity, the website was receiving over 6 million unique visitors per month.[5][2] In the site's early days, the entire newscast could be viewed for free online.[3] The site was initially supported by advertising, but this changed after the collapse of Internet advertising that occurred with the dot-com crash. By 2002, only one news segment could be viewed for free,[5] and by 2004, no free content remained on the website.[3] Beginning in 2005, a nudity-free version of Naked News was available to non-subscribers. Beginning in June 2008, two news segments could be viewed for free. However, this ended in December 2009.[citation needed]

In 2001, following the success of The Naked Truth, a similar show on Russian television, the Naked News website launched Naked News TV!, a 45-minute[11] show initially broadcast on the pay-per-view cable television channel Viewers Choice in Canada.[2] It was broadcast in the United States a few months later by the iN DEMAND[12] cable TV service on its Too Much for TV pay-per-view network that also included Girls Gone Wild. In 2002, it was broadcast in Australia on The Comedy Channel via cable and satellite television platforms Foxtel and Austar.[5] The British channel Sumo TV briefly showed episodes of Naked News, while the free-to-view Playboy One broadcast the show at 9:30pm Mondays-Fridays until its closure in 2008.

A male version of the show ran from 2001 until 2007. It was created to parallel the female version, but ceased production as it did not enjoy the female version's popularity and fame. Although it was originally targeted towards female viewers (at one point said to be 30% of the website's audience), the male show later promoted itself as news from a gay perspective.[13]

Naked News launched a Japanese version of the show in 2006.[14] Sunrise Corp. CEO Takuya Uchikawa and Naked News owner eGalaxy Multimedia CEO David Warga partnered the venture, starting with Naked News content using Japanese subtitles.[15] Japanese broadcasting regulations prohibited the presenters from being fully naked, allowing them only to strip to their underwear.[16] In 2007, the Japanese government changed broadcasting guidelines to prevent the show receiving a subsidy for the section delivered in sign language.[17]

In the media

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In 2013, Naked News was the subject of an eight-part documentary series called Naked News Uncovered, which was broadcast on Super Channel in Canada.[18]

The female announcers have been featured on (CBS Sunday Morning, The Today Show, The View, Sally Jessy Raphaël, and numerous appearances on Entertainment Tonight and ET Insider), newspapers and magazines (TV Guide, Playboy), and as guests on several radio shows, including Howard Stern.[19]

Similar shows

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Naked News presenter Lily Kwan (right)

In the late 1990s, British cable television channel L!VE TV broadcast Tiffani's Big City Tips, in which model Tiffani Banister gave the financial news while stripping to her underwear.[20]

Franchisees

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  • In June 2009, plans for Naked News Korea were announced. It featured a similar format to the Canadian version but with less nudity. This was later revealed to be a scam. After barely a month of operations, Naked News Korea, which featured topless news anchors, abruptly closed down amid allegations that the company's two heads, an Israeli entrepreneur, Yoav Sinai and a New Zealander investor of Chinese descent, CEO John Chau (Chow) left the country without paying deferred salaries.[21] Although Chau bought the naming rights from the Naked News, it was never an official subsidiary of the Toronto-based Canadian company.[22][23]

Imitators

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  • Comédie+ – In 2001, this French cable TV network ran a series promos featuring males and females casually undressing as they read jokes. In 2006 they copied the Naked News format in its entirety in a striptease newscast called Les Nuz, except the anchors keep their bottom underwear on.[citation needed]
  • Radio Tango – In 2001 this radio station based in Oslo, Norway began featuring stripping female weather readers in their broadcasts and on their website.[24]
  • A very similar phenomenon by the name "Noodie News" appears in Canadian Margaret Atwood's 2003 novel Oryx and Crake.[25][26][27]
  • Počasíčko[28] (diminutive of "weather") was Czech TV Nova's past-10PM featurette launched in January 1998 where a nude woman (or occasionally, a man) got dressed in clothing appropriate for the next day's weather forecast.[29] This was discontinued after several years and returned as web-only in February 2007. When Nova launched a new online portal in May 2008, it included a "Red News"[30] section causing controversy; asked about the Naked News, they denied securing license and stressed Počasíčko's primacy.
  • In March 2010, students at the University of Cambridge presented a news segment on Cambridge University Television in the nude.[31]
  • French spoof news site Les Graves Infos (Serious News) was launched in mid-2009 with a stripping weather girl.[32] The site closed in February 2010.[33]
  • In June 2014, a very similar show was released in Venezuela called Desnudando la Noticia (Stripping the News) which is a variant of Naked News.[34]
  • In Portugal, a five-minute news bulletin fronted by a naked woman, titled Nutícias, premiered on 22 April 2002 on cable station SIC Radical. The show was canceled in 2003.[citation needed]
  • A Finnish copy of the Naked News concept was broadcast on the country's Aluetelevisio cable television channel. The show employed erotic actress Maria Kekkonen as a reporter. A former porn actress, Rakel Liekki, also worked for the show.[citation needed]

Parodies

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  • A 2005 episode of the satirical New Zealand news show Eating Media Lunch depicted newsreaders fornicating in a parody of Naked News called "Fuck News".[35]

References

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  1. ^ "Meet the Anchors". Naked News. Retrieved 31 July 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "Net news to bare all on TV". BBC News. 7 September 2001.
  3. ^ a b c d Mutz, Diana Carole (2015). In-Your-Face Politics: The Consequences of Uncivil Media. Princeton University Press. p. 215. ISBN 9781400865871.
  4. ^ Meikle, Graham (2008). Interpreting News. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 119. ISBN 9781137105677. OCLC 682906029.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Naked News TV! to Air New Episodes on Australian T.V." Free Online Library (Press release). Business Wire. 2 October 2002. Archived from the original on 2 August 2017.
  6. ^ Herman, Dan (2008). Outsmart the MBA Clones: The Alternative Guide to Competitive Strategy, Marketing, and Branding. Paramount Market Publishing. p. 25. ISBN 9780978660284. OCLC 180751242.
  7. ^ Neal, Rome (24 October 2003). "Turning Heads At Naked News". CBS News. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  8. ^ Elder, Robert K. (13 January 2002). "Just the Bare Facts About the Naked News". South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Retrieved 18 March 2020.
  9. ^ Mindich, David T. Z. (2005). Tuned Out: Why Americans Under 40 Don't Follow the News. Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 55–56.
  10. ^ Brown, Robert E. (2005). "Book review – Tuned Out: Why Americans Under 40 Don't Follow the News by David T.Z. Mindich". Public Relations Review. 31 (4): 586. doi:10.1016/j.pubrev.2005.08.021. ISBN 9780195161403. OCLC 57137249.
  11. ^ "Naked News in bid to flesh out world coverage". The Sydney Morning Herald. 11 January 2008.
  12. ^ Bartholomew, Penny Nelson (6 December 2001). "Of Human Interest: News-lite". United Press International.
  13. ^ McDonald, Gayle (14 April 2004). "Naked men give it to you straight". Globe & Mail. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  14. ^ Ryall, Julian (11 January 2006). "Naked News makes debut in Japan". Today.
  15. ^ "Naked News makes debut in Japan". Hollywood Reporter.
  16. ^ "Canada's 'Naked News' to Broadcast in Spanish, Italian, Korean". Fox News. 10 January 2008.
  17. ^ "Naked news defies subsidy strip". Gulf News. 18 August 2007.
  18. ^ Doyle, John (23 September 2013). "Naked News Uncovered? New, nutty but not so naughty". The Globe and Mail.
  19. ^ Forbis, Wil (1 May 2001). "It's the News, Naked..." Acid Logic. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  20. ^ Ashley Hames, "Sin Cities", Tonto Books, 2008, ISBN 0-9556326-0-9, p.33
  21. ^ "Korea's "Naked News" shuts down". The Hollywood Reporter. Hollywood Reporter Incorporated. 2009.
  22. ^ "Korean Cover-Up". The Hollywood Reporter. Vol. 410–411. Hollywood Reporter Incorporated. 2009. p. 40.
  23. ^ cooleo (10 August 2009). "Naked News (Korea version)". sammyboy.com. Retrieved 15 September 2017.
  24. ^ "Radio Tango calls the tune in the nude". IOL News. Reuters. 4 May 2001. Retrieved 4 December 2017.
  25. ^ Howells, Coral Ann (30 March 2006). Howells, Coral Ann (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Margaret Atwood (1 ed.). Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/ccol0521839661. ISBN 978-0-521-83966-2. OCLC 61362106. S2CID 160396201.
  26. ^ John Moss, Tobi Kozakewich, "Margaret Atwood: The Open Eye", Re-appraisals, Canadian writers, volume 30, University of Ottawa Press, 2006, ISBN 0-7766-0613-1, p.398
  27. ^ Sharon Rose Wilson, "Myths and fairy tales in contemporary women's fiction: from Atwood to Morrison", Palgrave Macmillan, 2008, ISBN 0-230-60554-0, pp.43,49
  28. ^ Počasíčko Archived 24 June 2002 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ Čulík, Jan (27 September 1999). "More Moribund Manoeuvering". Central Europe Review. Archived from the original on 16 January 2000.
  30. ^ "Red News". tn.nova.cz/red (in Czech). cz: nova.cz. 8 May 2008. Archived from the original on 7 October 2011. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
  31. ^ "The Naked News Presented by Cambridge University Students". Telegraph. 5 March 2010. Archived from the original on 8 March 2010. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  32. ^ Korben (2 May 2009). "Les Graves Infos – Le site d'humour sans humour de Dominique Farrugia" [Les Graves Infos – Dominique Farrugia's Unfunny Comedy Site] (in French).
  33. ^ "Les graves infos". lesgravesinfos.fr. 12 February 2010. Archived from the original on 17 December 2014. Retrieved 9 June 2015.
  34. ^ Tom Sheen (17 June 2015). "Venezuelan TV host gets completely naked while reporting on Copa America win over Colombia". The Independent. Archived from the original on 18 June 2022. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
  35. ^ "TVNZ and Morrish and Valenta - 2005-137". Archived from the original on 7 June 2008. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
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